“It's
always good to go home. It's strengthening to see your past and know you have
someplace to go where you're part of a people.” – John Trudell
Born
into the Dakota Santee nation on this date in 1946, Trudell (who died in 2015) was
an author, poet, actor, musician and political activist who spent most of his
writing life combining his poetry with traditional Native American music.
A
leading spokesperson for the American Indian Movement, Trudell said he felt
truth came from the arts. “When one lives in a society where people
can no longer rely on the institutions to tell them the truth,” he
said, “the truth must come from culture and art.”
For a look at some 25 years of Trudell’s powerful
writings, check out the book Lines From a Mined Mind: The Words of John
Trudell.
As
an actor, Trudell performed in many movies, including Thunderheart, On
Deadly Ground and Smoke Signals. He also served as
adviser to the award-winning documentary Incident at Oglala, Robert
Redford’s “real life” companion piece to the fictional Thunderheart
and exploring the 1975 shooting of two FBI agents on South Dakota’s Pine
Ridge Reservation.
A
writer before he became a musician, Trudell once noted that “Every song I've
ever written starts with the words. I want
the music to be . . . (an) extension of the feelings of the words, and not the
words being the emotional extension of the feeling of the music.”
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